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Turn your hands so they oppose each other at 90 degrees, put them together, put the "outside" of your thumbs together. Blow between the gaps of your thumbs and raise/lower the fingers of one hand to make the unique whistling noise that was used for this music The trumpet part finishes it off very nicely and gravel-ly!

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It's a completely different thing and like when my hands grew and I could not do it anymore it could be individual to each guy.

In the woods or big pastures you could tell who was who by the sound of that "signal"

Strategically used by us as ten year olds.

Tsk, tsk, tsk

I know what you are talking about, but you will have to prove that the pros did it that way for the soundtracks. A real whistler can do amazing things. Now, as for the controversy, my hypothesis is that the Englishman may have whistled it for the cover version, while Andressoni whistled the film version.

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Thanks @oldtimer simple deductive reasoning. We all imitated it perfectly in unison the first time we saw it. Used our hands like that and blew through them. @billybob you don't do that at the theater do you?